Most Jersey people would call the cops on a noisy neighbor. This woman baked him a cake.

When a Mercer County woman was kept up all night by the club music playing loudly out of the apartment next door, she didn’t chew him out or call the cops.

Nope, her solution was much sweeter — she baked him a cake.

In a Twitter thread from Dec. 15 that’s now gone viral, Candice Benbow explained that she left the poundcake and a letter by his doorstep.

“Last night... Fam, you tried it. You really, really did,” she wrote.

“I don’t know if you were hosting the official afterparty for our building’s holiday social or singlehandedly determining this generation’s R&B king,” Benbow wrote. “But 3 a.m. is just too late to be that loud.”

Benbow wrote that she went through a range of emotions throughout the night, like at 3:47 a.m., when she said she “realized it was much more advantageous to reflect on [his] musical tastes and eat potato chips than try to sleep.”

It was around 3:30 a.m. that she decided to bake.

“I realized I was taking your feelings into much more consideration than you were taking mine,” she wrote to him. “I hope that changes, especially since I’m only three months into a 13 month lease.”

She wrote that when he started to wind down the party down at 4:07 a.m., she appreciated it.

The update is, thankfully, there is no update. I knocked on his door but he didn’t answer so I had to leave it in a bag on his door. When I left out, it wasn’t on his door anymore. So I’m taking that to mean he got and read it.

Amaro said he had woken up the day after his party and found her note.

“It was beautiful,” he said on Inside Edition. “Because if it was another neighbor, they probably would have tried calling the cops on me or knocking me out.”

The two have since bonded, telling Inside Edition that they’re both new to the Trenton area. Benbow’s originally from North Carolina, while Amaro just moved from Brooklyn.

Benbow also said they connected over grieving the loss of a loved one during the holiday season.

“While talking to Tommy, I learned that he’s new to the area as well *and* this is his first Christmas without his daughter, who passed away earlier this year in a car accident,” she tweeted.

“Ya’ll know how rough grieving was for me in the months following Mama’s death. I can only imagine what it would have felt like for someone to confront me with anger when I’m trying my best to get through my first holiday season," she said.

In the days since Benbow and Amaro met, their story has gone viral.

They’ve become fast friends, and Twitter users are calling for more behavior like Benbow’s in the face of frustration.

“It was a sweet and gentle reminder that we never know what folks are going through and it is always best to lead with kindness,” she tweeted a few days after leaving him the cake. “When we can extend grace, we really should.”